Skip to content
This repository was archived by the owner on Nov 20, 2020. It is now read-only.

Griefed/docker-Composerize

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

29 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

docker-Composerize


Docker Pulls Docker Image Size (latest by date) Docker Cloud Build Status Docker Cloud Automated build GitHub Repo stars GitHub forks

docker-Composerize

Turns docker run commands into docker-compose files!

composerize


Creates a Container which runs magicmark's composerize, with lsiobase/nginx as the base image, as seen on http://composerize.com/.

The lsiobase/nginx image is a custom base image built with Alpine linux and S6 overlay. Using this image allows us to use the same user/group ids in the container as on the host, making file transfers much easier

Deployment

Tags Description
latest Using the latest tag will pull the latest image for amd64/x86_64 architecture.
arm Using the armtag will pull the latest image for arm architecture. Use this if you intend on running the container on a Raspberry Pi 3B, for example.

Pre-built images

version: '3.6'
services:
  composerize:
    container_name: composerize
    image: griefed/composerize
    restart: unless-stopped
    volumes:
      - ./path/to/config:/config
    environment:
      - TZ=Europe/Berlin
      - PUID=1000  # User ID
      - PGID=1000  # Group ID
    ports:
      - 80:8080
      - 443:443

Raspberry Pi

To run this container on a Raspberry Pi, use the arm-tag. I've tested it on a Raspberry Pi 3B.

griefed/composerize:arm

Configuration

Configuration Explanation
Restart policy "no", always, on-failure, unless-stopped
config volume Contains config files and logs.
data volume Contains your/the containers important data.
TZ Timezone
PUID for UserID
PGID for GroupID
ports The port where the service will be available at.

User / Group Identifiers

When using volumes, permissions issues can arise between the host OS and the container. Linuxserver.io avoids this issue by allowing you to specify the user PUID and group PGID.

Ensure any volume directories on the host are owned by the same user you specify and any permissions issues will vanish like magic.

In this instance PUID=1000 and PGID=1000, to find yours use id user as below:

  $ id username
    uid=1000(dockeruser) gid=1000(dockergroup) groups=1000(dockergroup)

Building the image yourself

Use the Dockerfile to build the image yourself, in case you want to make any changes to it

docker-compose.yml

version: '3.6'
services:
  composerize:
    container_name: composerize
    build: ./docker-Composerize/
    restart: unless-stopped
    volumes:
      - ./path/to/config/files:/config
    environment:
      - TZ=Europe/Berlin
      - PUID=1000  # User ID
      - PGID=1000  # Group ID
    ports:
      - 8080:8080
      - 443:443
  1. Clone the repository: git clone https://github.com/Griefed/docker-Composerize.git ./docker-Composerize
  2. Prepare docker-compose.yml file as seen above
  3. docker-compose up -d --build composerize
  4. Visit IP.ADDRESS.OF.HOST:8080
  5. ???
  6. Profit!

Packages

 
 
 

Contributors